TIE MICHIGAN ATTY -WEDNESDAY, lJULY 5, 1950 i tiiila i. VLL1 {) 1VVV r; RACKHAM EXHIBIT DRAWS COMMENT: Skeptics, Admirers View Contemporary Art Vets Disgusted, Overjoyed at Omnipresence Personified * * * * * * * * * * By NANCY BYLAN What does the average man-in- the-gallery think of contemporary visual art? He agrees, that like the tele- phone, it's here to stay, but his wife is a little wary of putting in her library a chair with a seat ap- parently made out of shoelaces. * * * THE CURRENT display of con- temporary visual art at the Rack- ham galleries, however, assures the exhibit-goer that he is de- cidedly a part of the new move- ment in art, and to prove it, offers examples at their functional best. The exhibit, which will run until the end of July, is spon- sored by the architecture col- lege and was assembled by Prof. Emil Weddige. Beginning with a sampling of old-fashioned art, it runs through a series of in- formative posters on design, which include everything from a statue of Queen Hatsheput (Egypt, c. 1499 B.C.) to a Frank Lloyd Wright creaiion (Califor- nia, 1937). The display then merges into actual examples of contemporary visual art - paintings, sculpture, ceramics, dishware and china, industrial design, house design, interior decorating, landscaping, civic planning, and even the mo- del of a Methodist church. ESPECIALLY noteworthy is the model of a new type of school building - Unistrut - developed by a University research project and soon to be erected in Pitts- field village. - Astonished, admiration was registered by most of the many people who filed, singly and by families, through the exhibit. Particula, oo's and ah's were east at the three model rooms which constitute the major at- traction of the display. A common tendency among the women at the exhibit was to fin- ger the drapery material skepti- cally, while the men eyed the furniture with distrust. "THE LEGS of that chair don't look as if they'd hold me," one portly gentlemen remarked. It was generally agreed, how- ever, that despite the odd curva- tures of the chairs, the furni- ture did look comfortable, and many wives boasted, "Oh, look, dear, WE have one of those." The real significance of the vi- sual arts exhibit was summed up by one woman as she and her husband departed. "It gives me ideas," she said. By BARNES CONNABLE This week with the war news from Korea came word of a war- time phenomenon familiar to all servicemen and veterans. The peripatetic little man with the long nose had returned. Kilroy was back. * * , , REACTION of campus veterans ranged from apparent disgust to complete indifference. "It's nauseating," commented vet Dave Burnell, Grad. '49. "I never liked Kilroy 'and I never will. I'd forgotten all about him. He reminds me of the army and all that sort of thing," he added. Burnell stated that he had "be- rated Kilroy roundly and soundly on several occasions." When quer- ied about overseas experience with the omnipresent wall-climber, he said that he could remember no Kilroy signs that were repeatable. * * * "SO WHAT?" replied Malcolm Raphael, Grad. '49, when confront- ed with the tidings of Kilroy's presence in the Orient. "The news is too insignificant to warrant my comment," Ra- phael said. He added that he never heard of Kilroy until he returned from the navy. Only favorable reaction to the news was exhibited by Bradford Shellsworthy Brown, Grad.: "I cannot express my deep joy at hearing the announcement that Kilroy is back. Just like General MacArthur, he has returned. To- night I shall drink a glass of green beer in hysterical celebration." Faculty To Study TruckingRules Two University faculty members have been named to a special commission which will seek ways of tightening state regulations cov- ering trucks and other common carriers. Gov. G. Mennen Williams ap- pointed as chairman of the com- mission Prof. Paul G. Kauper of the Law School. A member of the commission will be John S. Wor- ley, emeritus professor of trans- portation engineering. In announcing the commission, Governor Williams said there are "too many reports of chiseling and violations of weight and safety restrictions by a small percentage of trucking operators." It is evi- dent, he said, that present regula- tions are inadequate. Read Daily Classifieds !i CLUB211? MANY STUDENTS have yet to realize the profit to be gained by joining J. D. Miller's CLUB 211, merely be- cause they don't realize how simple it is to become a member. When you buy your FIRST Meal Ticket you become a 211 Member and, as such, immediately lay claim to these savings: FOOD - appetizing, man-sized meals ... $1.50 a day LAUNDRY - 5% below standard rates DRY CLEANING - 25% reduction SHOE REPAIRING - Soles and heels ... $1.98 MODEL ROOMS-Not of the future but of today are these examples of interior decorating featured at the current Contemporary Vis- ual Arts exhibit at the Rackham Galleries. Scheduled, to run through July, the display has already attracted much attention, and a steady stream of visitors passes through every day, making many revealing comments. * * * * * 4 * Rannells Opens Arts, Society Course By WENDY OWEN The first lecture in the Con- temporary Arts and Society course soared into the realm of space and form in painting under the guid- ance of Prof. Edward W. Rannells, chairman of the department of art at the University of Kentucky. "The artist of today cannot work creatively in the tidy limits of the classic model," he declared, "but projects his everyday experi- ences of the new, mobile space in- to his work, and thus comes closer to the essential reality of the world than the experimental phy- sicist." HE PROJECTED a simple re- presentation of three buildings on the screen, to use as a classic mo- RED TANKS, COURTS: Weary South Koreans Have Two Main Fears del, and described the symmetry and mechanical use of perspective which the artist had used to cre- ate his representation. "But this,"1 he continued, "was rendered use- less and unprofitable by the in- troduction of the camera." Thus the artist was forced to go farther afield. With such masters as Cezanne, Picasso and the cubists the 'new art' began to take shape, he continued. Art is an expression of man's ex- perience, and has often been called the best commentary on our time. Also, he added, art mirrors the spectator, not life. * , * THUS IN AN AGE where sci- ence was learningathat the classic ideas of matter and time would have to be made over, artists were finding new forms, related to the new conception of the world. Ce- zanne built his paintings on color planes which were identified with the form they depicted and with their place space. But the space remained in perspective, as in the classic model. The cubists removed this vestige of classicism when they broke ob- jects down into prismatic, some- times transparent shapes, with surface faces resolved into series of planes. They introduced fur- ther simplification both of form and color. Thus the space of their paintings was very limited in depth, but the subtle nuances of shape were really able to come, Prof. Rannells pointed out. * * * ART THEN, can be considered a language sign, rather than of the emotions. It must be experi- enced empathically. In painting, he said, the form must be a lan- guage of gesture and movement which the spectator can see and feel. To be right, or to conform aesthetically with the spectator, these movements must be the gestures and movements of the body, Prof. Rannells emphasized, in the some way that a viewer feels the 'rightness' of a rect- angle made according to the golden rule of proportion. Modern art is composed of new forms which project a new world. The pace of the form-givers may have been too fast for its specta- tors, but there is no cause for des- pair, he concluded. BusAd Faculty j Balance' Books Practical businessmen got a lesson on how to show a profit from the "theoretical" professors at the University business admin- istration school. At the beginning of last se- mester, faculty members of the school bought themselves a toffee pot and chipped in a set sum each to buy coffee, cream and sugar Last week they audited the books. The "balance" sheet shows: In- come, 37.20; Expenses, all paid, $49.36. Loss, $12.16? Not at all. Balance on hand is $3.62. 211 South State Street Phone 2-8315 er Cafeteria MART WALKER'S BIG 4th of JULY (EDITOR'S NOTE: Establishment in Seoul of people's courts -- first taste of terror for Communist "liberated" areas - and weary hopelessnessof South Koreans on the last night they held all the Han River line are reported vividly in this delayed dis- patch which arrived in Tokyo.) By TOM LAMBERT ALONG HAN RIVER DEFENSE LINE OUTSIDE SEOUL, June 29 - (Delayed) -- (A') - The poorly- equipped, badly battered South Korean defenders have two fears tonight - Russian-made tanks and the Red's people's court in Seoul. They had nothing with which to stop the tanks. There was no- thing they could do about the North Korean's people's court, al- though many of the men - es- pecially the officers - knew that their families were trapped in the Communist-held city. GENERAL Yu Jae Heung, 29 years old, a graduate of the Japa- nese military academy, had his headquarters in a hospital's dental office. It was still equipped with chairs, drills, overhead light fix- tures and medicines. Heung, whose wife and two children are in Seoul said South Koreans who have crossed the Han the past two days told him Coammunist invaders already have started "people's courts." The courts, he added, have gi- ven "priority" on trials to families of South Korean officers, police, upper grade South Korean Gov- rnment officials and supporters. He said the South Koreans have lost all their artillery and much equipment to the enemy. HE ESTIMATED that three- fourths of the Southern force, ap- proximately 900,000 troops, are on fhp Smith Ride of the 1Hn.This none. Enemy have long artillery - our 105's too short." We asked Lee if American troops would help. His face lit up and he said: "Just let me have one platoon -eto show to my soldiers. My men's morale now like this - (he dropped his hand toward the floor) - would go like this" (He whipped his hand over his head.) But before the Southern de- fenders can start a northern of- fensive, said the Korean General, his troops must have airpower, tanks, heavy artillery and engi- neers. 9 COATS Originally to $29.95 $9-$11 -$15 Zllatcti sandi 5 4 4 Better Dresses Originally to $29.95 $11 -$13 =$15 Marti Walker's SALE POLICY 1-There will be a store-wide event of money-saving special purchases and clearances. 2-The prices quoted represent substantial reductions and thus in- sure real savings to help you keep down the high-cost-of-living. 3-All Marti Walker's sale items must measure up to high standards of quality. 4-In addition to items advertised for our sale, you'll find many un- advertised items on sale under Marti Walker's sale signs. 6 FORMALS Formerly $29.95 $13 SUN BRAS and PLA BRAS 100 Cotton Dresses Va ues to $16.95 m $7 - BLOUSES' 58 Cottons - Values to $5.95 $1.90-$2.90-$3.90 49 Others - Values to $8.95 $2.90--$3 .90-$4.90 100 Cotton Skirits $2.90 61-Values to $8.95 $39 3-l195 $390 39-Values to $ 10.95 *4,9 Originally $3.50-Now Originally $4.98--Now $2 30 $340 TERRYCLOTH TAILORED Cotton Shirts Beach Robes Formerly Formerly $2.50-Now $2.25-Now- $150 $125 BOAR LEATHER CORDOVAN LEATHER KANGAROO LEATHER SNAKE LEATHER ALLIGATOR LEATHER CALF LEATHER SEAL LEATHER PIG LEATHER WALRUS LEATHER LIZARD LEATHER GOLD AND SILVER LINK BANDS MESH BANDS WOVEN BANDS SLIP OVER BANDS EXPANSION BANDS STAINLESS STEEL SLIPOVER BANDS NYLON BANDS KOROSEAL BANDS DENIMS 11 SUITS Originally to $55 $22 SKIRTS $6.98 Values $3.90 SKIRTS $3.98 Values $2.90 SHORTS $2.98 Values $1.90 JACKETS $7.98 Values $4.90 JACKETS $5.98 Values $3.90 Pedal Pushers $3.50 Values $x.30 GOAT LEATHER I 11. AIt mml Narrow, Wide and Extra Long IIDICI CD 'II F II r1 uA r3 r~ P*VII Were $1.95, Now 98c I I II I II1-C ®1CI I IE I I